bash-exp.xml 2.2 KB

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  1. <sect2>
  2. <title>Command explanations</title>
  3. <para><userinput>--enable-static-link:</userinput> This configure
  4. option causes Bash to be linked statically</para>
  5. <para><userinput>--prefix=$LFS/usr:</userinput> This configure option installs
  6. all of Bash's files under the $LFS/usr directory, which becomes the /usr
  7. directory after the user chroot'ed into $LFS or when he rebooted
  8. the system into LFS.</para>
  9. <para><userinput>--bindir=$LFS/bin:</userinput> This installs the executable
  10. files in $LFS/bin. We do this because we want bash to be in /bin, not in
  11. /usr/bin. One reason being: the /usr partition might be on a separate
  12. partition which has to be mounted at some point. Before that partition is
  13. mounted you need and will want to have bash available (it will be hard to
  14. execute the boot scripts without a shell for instance).</para>
  15. <para><userinput>--with-curses:</userinput> This causes Bash to be
  16. linked against the curses library instead of the default termcap
  17. library which is becoming obsolete.</para>
  18. <para>It is not strictly necessary for the static bash to be linked
  19. against libncurses (it can link against a static termap for the time
  20. being just fine because we will reinstall Bash in chapter 6 anyways,
  21. where we will use libncurses), but it's a good test to make sure that
  22. the ncurses package has been installed properly. If not, you will get in
  23. trouble later on in this chapter when you install the Texinfo package.
  24. That package requires ncurses and termcap can't reliably be used
  25. there.</para>
  26. <para><userinput>ln -sf bash sh:</userinput> This command creates the sh
  27. symlink that points to bash. Most scripts run themselves via 'sh'
  28. (invoked by the #!/bin/sh as the first line in the scripts) which
  29. invokes a special bash mode. Bash will then behave (as closely as
  30. possible) as the original Bourne shell.</para>
  31. <para>The <userinput>&amp;&amp;</userinput>'s at the end of every line cause
  32. the next command to be executed only if the previous command exists
  33. with a return value of 0 indicating success. In case all of these
  34. commands are copy&amp;pasted
  35. on the shell, is is important to be ensured that if
  36. ./configure fails, make isn't being executed and, likewise, if make fails,
  37. that make install isn't being executed, and so forth.</para>
  38. </sect2>